And for reference--I wasn't even alive for the first
Blade Runner!
Rastoff said:
For the most part you're right, but there are exceptions. You mentioned Hi-Point and Bersa (specifically the Bersa .380AUTO). Both of those are guns I would never recommend. I've seen several of both in my classes and I have yet to see one work through the entire class.
I had an older woman with a Bersa .380 absolutely humiliate a guy with a Wilson Combat. I'd characterize her as a low-experience shooter, and I'd say that he had a lot of trigger time that served only to teach him bad habits. Specifically, he was a habitual excuse-maker.
I still wouldn't suggest the Bersa, myself.
As for Justin, I think he's taught himself some bad habits with the Glock. Take a look at that top group--he's got a perfect 3-shot cluster in there. The mechanics are present, the problem's mental.
I think there are two possible reasons:
--New Gun Syndrome, wherein he shoots better with an unfamiliar gun than an old favorite because it forces him to return to the fundamentals of shooting.
--Bad friggin' habits, wherein you spend a lot of time with a gun, slowly un-learning how to shoot it.
I'm horribly guilty of both. I shot a new personal-best with my whizz-bang BE gun, only to slump down to new lows for two seasons a few weeks later (although I know guys who own five or six high-dollar BE pistols based on this process, so maybe I'm not so bad).
As to the modifications--my point is more about people characterizing Glocks as being "unshootable" out of the box. Now, that's either a case of not fully appreciating how miserable some guns can be to shoot, or taking some rather extreme positions. Naturally, I don't think I can shoot all my guns equally well. But I can shoot my little Glock at least as well as my 1911.
*shrugs* I can't help myself, I dun' never met a handgun I didn't like, or one that didn't like me! Hell, I even used to hate on Sig Sauers, till I figured out they made this thing called the P250 that I'm tryin' to find and buy.